Merry Grinchmas!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

ObSEUSSed's Family

With a blog called ObSEUSSed, I couldn’t go through this season without mentioning the Grinch. We got to take pictures with the Grinch this year at my daughter’s school fundraiser. Barnes & Nobel donated a percentage of their profits to their school while the school provided Grinch and Dr. Seuss themed activities. The kids sang carols, went on a Dr. Seuss scavenger hunt around the store, made whimsical Who hats, listened to their principal read Dr. Seuss stories and took pics with the Grinch.

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One of our favorite holiday traditions is reading "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" to our kids and watching the movie. I love discussing the message of the story with my kids.
Play "How the Grinch Saved Christmas" game at Seussville.com
Grab the book or the movie at your local library or online (Amazon disclosure on About page.)

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Seuss Landing Grinch

Seuss Landing Grinch

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Use ornaments and candy as decor. Drip icing off side for icicles.

﻿﻿﻿﻿We went to Grandma’s house last week to decorate gingerbread (graham cracker) houses. She was so thoughtful and found Grinch ornaments for me to use on our houses. I plan to pull them off to use again next year as I work on creating a Whoville Christmas Village. (I’m so excited collecting things to create this from scratch.)

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﻿﻿ ﻿Graham Cracker Houses have been a tradition for our family since I was a little girl. We would make extra and take them to neighbors.

Graham Cracker House Tips:

Use a dull knife to saw the graham crackers into the shapes you need. Saw one square in half diagonally to create the triangles on the top of house. Then use all squares or all long rectangles (the whole graham cracker) for creating your sides and roof.

Face candy canes together to create a heart or a door. See the roof on mine.

Drip Icing off the roof to create icicles.

Use a pie tin for easy transportation and don't forget to decorate the yard. Coconut looks nice as snow.

Pick up decorative candy or ornaments at the dollar store to add to your house.

Don’t try to use store bought canned frosting for these- they will not stay together. Here is the recipe my mom always makes that is nice and soft to start with but dries or sets up quickly.﻿﻿

Use a Pie tin. Let your kids get creative.

ROYAL ICING
(Also known as 7 minute icing or frosting)

3 egg whites (room temp)

4 cups powdered sugar

﻿﻿﻿﻿﻿﻿ ½ teaspoon cream of tartar

Beat all ingredients at high speed for 7 to 10 minutes. (Easy if you have a Kitchen Aid.)

﻿﻿This icing is for putting things together such as gingerbread houses and sugar molds. It dries hard and fast. You need to keep it covered with a wet cloth or a tight fitting lid when not being used. It will keep several days in the refrigerator but you should let it come to room temperature before using. Re-beating will not restore texture. Yields about 2 ½ cups icing.

﻿If you want colored icing, put a dab of Wilton cake color paste on a toothpick and run through a cup of the icing. Stir it good. Keep adding a drop at a time until you get the desired color you desire.

just stumbled upon your site. I love Seuss, especially the Grinch. I actually have a costume and travel preforming the story "How The Grinch Stole Christmas" for schools, libraries, church groups, family parties, etc. I have traveled from Idaho Falls to St George. I have an entire tree that has nothing but Grinch ornaments on it. Thanks for the recipe. I plan on making it.

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ObSEUSSed participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, "an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com." ~~~~ When I post about books, I often link to Amazon so you can see more details, pictures or summaries. I recommend checking books out from your local library first to review them, then if you want to buy them, Amazon is one option. If you buy from using the link I provide I recieve a very small percentage of the sale from Amazon.